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#1
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Hi, guys
I have a few corals in my aquarium.(Xenia, Zoo, Elegant coral, and anemones) Current nitrate level is around 10 ppm. Also, is this level of nitrate really dangerous for my corals and anemone? Also, I'm trying to reduce it with macro algae such as caulerpa in a 29 G refugium, and denitrate matrix rock in power filter. Can I just wait for low nitrate level without water change? Is water change is the only way to reduce it in a short time? Thank you for reading. Sungwon |
#2
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Water changes are the ONLY way to lower nitrates, if your
tank has reached its limit naturally. http://www.melevsreef.com/reducing_nitrates.html Marc swhastan wrote: Hi, guys I have a few corals in my aquarium.(Xenia, Zoo, Elegant coral, and anemones) Current nitrate level is around 10 ppm. Also, is this level of nitrate really dangerous for my corals and anemone? Also, I'm trying to reduce it with macro algae such as caulerpa in a 29 G refugium, and denitrate matrix rock in power filter. Can I just wait for low nitrate level without water change? Is water change is the only way to reduce it in a short time? Thank you for reading. Sungwon -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#3
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![]() "Marc Levenson" wrote in message . com... | Water changes are the ONLY way to lower nitrates, if your | tank has reached its limit naturally. Marc, could you expand on that, you seem to be contradicting what I have been taking for granted, that is other methods of lowering nitrates other than water changes. billy P.S. I'm looking for a TDS meter, recommend one? |
#4
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![]() "Billy" wrote in message ... "Marc Levenson" wrote in message . com... | Water changes are the ONLY way to lower nitrates, if your | tank has reached its limit naturally. Marc, could you expand on that, you seem to be contradicting what I have been taking for granted, that is other methods of lowering nitrates other than water changes. billy P.S. I'm looking for a TDS meter, recommend one? Build a de-nitrator.....good stufff! lg |
#5
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Need a little (lot) more info to advise properly. For example are you using
Live Rock? DSB? What Skimmer? Size of tank? etc As general rules....if using live rock, make sure the structure is fairly open with good circulation in/around. When I had a substantial nitrate problem upping the circulationa around/through the rock was enough to sort it. Clean your skimmer regularly. Think about your feeding/maintainance regimens....is there a reason for the nitrates? What water are you using for top up/water changes.....have you checked that you are not putting nitrates into your tank? There is no reason, with a bit of forethought, not to be able to manage the nitrates. Water changes can help, but don't get to the root of why the nitrates are there. "swhastan" wrote in message ... Hi, guys I have a few corals in my aquarium.(Xenia, Zoo, Elegant coral, and anemones) Current nitrate level is around 10 ppm. Also, is this level of nitrate really dangerous for my corals and anemone? Also, I'm trying to reduce it with macro algae such as caulerpa in a 29 G refugium, and denitrate matrix rock in power filter. Can I just wait for low nitrate level without water change? Is water change is the only way to reduce it in a short time? Thank you for reading. Sungwon |
#6
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My tank is two month old 75 G with 29G refugium.
Setup: 40 lb of LR, 50 lb of CaribSea dry rock, 80 lb of LS, RedSea Berlin classic protein skimmer with a Rio HF20 pump. live stock: a blue tang, a yellow tang, two percular clowns, four damsels Zoos, elegant coral, xenia, colt, star polyps, anemones. I think the biggest mistake for high nitrate was using tap water for cycling. After that, I've used RO water for water change. Nitrate level is maintained at 10 ppm over a month after I put macro algae in a refugium. I thought macro algae coulld solve a nitrate problem, but it couldn't until now. So, I'm wondering which one is better: water change frequently or wait for more time. Also, I use Nori to feed my yellow tang Thanks. "Mark Taylor" wrote in message ... Need a little (lot) more info to advise properly. For example are you using Live Rock? DSB? What Skimmer? Size of tank? etc As general rules....if using live rock, make sure the structure is fairly open with good circulation in/around. When I had a substantial nitrate problem upping the circulationa around/through the rock was enough to sort it. Clean your skimmer regularly. Think about your feeding/maintainance regimens....is there a reason for the nitrates? What water are you using for top up/water changes.....have you checked that you are not putting nitrates into your tank? There is no reason, with a bit of forethought, not to be able to manage the nitrates. Water changes can help, but don't get to the root of why the nitrates are there. "swhastan" wrote in message ... Hi, guys I have a few corals in my aquarium.(Xenia, Zoo, Elegant coral, and anemones) Current nitrate level is around 10 ppm. Also, is this level of nitrate really dangerous for my corals and anemone? Also, I'm trying to reduce it with macro algae such as caulerpa in a 29 G refugium, and denitrate matrix rock in power filter. Can I just wait for low nitrate level without water change? Is water change is the only way to reduce it in a short time? Thank you for reading. Sungwon |
#7
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![]() "Billy" wrote in message ... "Marc Levenson" wrote in message . com... | Water changes are the ONLY way to lower nitrates, if your | tank has reached its limit naturally. Marc, could you expand on that, you seem to be contradicting what I have been taking for granted, that is other methods of lowering nitrates other than water changes. billy P.S. I'm looking for a TDS meter, recommend one? Can You be a bit specific? Which part you are referring to having conflict? Any TDS meter will do fine if you are trying to measure your source water prior to your mix or to your tank. CapFusion,... |
#8
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It is possible to have a tank with 0 nitrates, but that
isn't very common. LR and a DSB denitrify the water, but if the tank is heavily populated, or there is excessive feeding, or the equipment used creates nitrates, the LR & DSB will not be able to remove it all. For example, if the person is using a Wet/Dry sump, or uses Biowheels on the returns, or sponges in their overflow boxes, these will continuously create more nitrates. The only way to remove the excess nitrates is via water changes. Once the numbers are low enough, the DSB, LR and macro algae can work on the smaller nitrate level, and pretty much wipe it out entirely. If you check my parameters page on my site, my tanks tend to have some nitrates. Turns out clams actually need a little nitrate in the water to live, btw. However, there have been times in the past when my tests came up ZERO, much to my surprise and to my pleasure. ![]() Changing the water, lots of water, will lower nitrates quickly and as long as the tank has been set up correctly, those numbers will stay down. However, using tap water, an UGF, and the other things I mentioned above tend to keep nitrates very high. Marc PS: I use the Hanna hand-held TDS meter, and Marine Depot sells them. Billy wrote: "Marc Levenson" wrote in message . com... | Water changes are the ONLY way to lower nitrates, if your | tank has reached its limit naturally. Marc, could you expand on that, you seem to be contradicting what I have been taking for granted, that is other methods of lowering nitrates other than water changes. billy P.S. I'm looking for a TDS meter, recommend one? -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
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